Scott v. Mattingly

182 So. 24, 236 Ala. 254, 1938 Ala. LEXIS 165
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 9, 1938
Docket6 Div. 259.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 182 So. 24 (Scott v. Mattingly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Mattingly, 182 So. 24, 236 Ala. 254, 1938 Ala. LEXIS 165 (Ala. 1938).

Opinion

KNIGHT, Justice.

The bill in this cause was filed by the complainants, appellees here, against the Board of Education of Walker County, the individual members of said Board and also against the County Superintendent of Education of said county, seeking to enjoin the respondents from purchasing certain busses to be used in the transportation of school children from various points in the county to the public schools of said county; and to cancel the contract of purchase, and, in an amendment to the bill, to restrain the Board of Education from issuing bonds or warrants for the purpose of securing the money with which to pay for said busses; and for general relief.

To the bill as amended the respondents separately and severally demurred. The principal ground of demurrer here argued is that challenging the equity of ‘the bill.

The court below overruled the demurrer, and from this decree the respondents prosecute the present appeal.

It appears from the averments of the bill that the complainants are taxpayers, and citizens of Walker County, and are engaged in the business of selling automobiles, and auto busses and trucks, of similar kind and character as the busses which, it is averred, the respondent Board of Education has undertaken to purchase of a non-resident concern.

The bill avers that on, towit, the 31st day of August, 1937, the respondents purchased, or attempted to purchase, twelve “Indiana” school busses, at an agreed price of approximately $25,000, under a claim that the same were necessary for use in the transportation of school children from various points in the county to the public schools. That the purchase or attempted purchase of said busses was unnecessary, and was without legal authority; “that the condition of the school funds in said county was in such shape that the respondents were unauthorized to expend said large amount for said busses.”

*256 It is further charged that “the teachers who taught in the public schools in Walker County during the last term have not been paid in full for their services; that the defendants have borrowed, towit, $16,-000 with which to pay the teachers for their services for last term; that said debt of towit, $16,000.00 for past services rendered by teachers is still due and unpaid and drawing interest; that the expenditure or attempted expenditure of approximately $25,000.00 for twelve school busses was a usurpation of authority on the part of the defendants; was a waste of the taxpayers money; was unauthorized under the facts as they exist in this county and under the law as it exists in this state.”

It is also charged that busses similar .to the busses purchased, and which would do the work the said busses were purchased to do, and which could be operated at a much less expense, were obtainable from local dealers in Walker County, Alabama, for a much smaller price than the amount the respondents agreed to pay for the “Indiana” busses.

It is also averred that “the complainants, as such dealers, or a portion of them, offered to sell to the respondents busses of similar kind for a much smaller amount than the respondents agreed to pay for said ‘Indiana’ busses. * * * The complainants were not informed by the respondents that the respondents expected to buy busses, but were notified that no busses would be bought this year, and the respondents further notified the complainants * * * that they had no money with which to buy busses.”

Continuing, the bill charges, “That the said purchase of said busses was unnecessary; that there were sufficient busses in said county, with a small expenditure for repairing, to carry all the children to and fro from one community to another and that the said purchase of said busses was wholly unnecessary; was without authority; and was a fraud on the part of the said defendants in so far As affects, the rights of the school children and the rights of the school teachers of Walker County.”

There were other averments of the bill which we deem it unnecessary to detail here.

However, the bill nowhere avers that the respondents personally profited, or were supposed to profit in any way by said transaction.

In making the purchase the respondents were acting in their official capacity as the Board of Education of Walker County.

Section 100 of the 1927 School Code provides :

“The County Board of Education shall consolidate schools wherever in its judgment it is practicable, and arrange, if necessary for the transportation of pupils to and from such consolidated schools.”

Section 132 of the same Code provides : <

“The County Board'of Education shall have the right to acquire, purchase, or by the institution of condemnation proceedings if necessary, lease, receive, hold, transmit and convey the title to real and personal property for school purposes. It may sue and contract, all contracts to be made after resolutions have been adopted by the Board and spread upon its minutes. All processes shall be executed by service on the executive officer of the Board.”

In the case of Reed v. McCracken et al., 233 Ala. 175, 170 So. 765, this Court held that the County Board of Education had statutory authority, not only for the consolidation of schools, but also for the transportation of pupils. This authority given the Board to arrange for the transportation 'of pupils, in the absence of other statutory provisions, necessarily includes the right to provide means of transportation. We do not think it debatable that the Board possesses the right to purchase school busses in such numbers as are reasonably necessary to accommodate the pupils of the several consolidated schools, and incidental to this authority, is also the right to determine the character of the busses, to the end that the welfare and safety of the pupils may be best conserved.

This Court is committed to the proposition that a Court of Equity has no general supervisory power over the transportation of school children by the governmental agency set up for the purpose. Salter v. Board of Education of Jefferson County et al., 229 Ala. 631, 159 So. 78. The right to determine the number of busses, as well as the character of the same best suited to the purposes, has been confided by the Legislature to the County Board of Education, and a Court of Equity will not interfere with the acts of these administrative agencies, unless their acts are infected with fraud, or bad faith, or gross abuse of discretion. Reed v. Mc- *257 Cracken, supra; State ex rel. King et al. v. Board of Education of Russell County, 214 Ala. 620, 108 So. 588; Christian v. Jones, 211 Ala. 161, 100 So. 99, 32 A.L.R. 1340.

In Vol. 32, Corpus Juris, p. 242, § 384, the author of the text states the rule with respect to restraining public officials in the exercise of their discretion in the performance of their .official duties, as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
182 So. 24, 236 Ala. 254, 1938 Ala. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-mattingly-ala-1938.